Synopsis
Editor in Chief @ AJPH Epidemiologist, MD PHD
Episodes
-
AJPH Podcast (JUNE 2018), 1968-2018, PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIVISM OLD AND NEW (ENGLISH)
09/05/2018 Duration: 27minIs the new public health activism different from the old one? I address this question because we are in 2018 and that 50 years ago, 1968 remains the symbolic year of a transformative decade, the sixties, from which public health emerged profoundly transformed. Today there is a new public health activism challenges which challenges injustices. How different is the new activism from the older one? My guests are Prof Nick Freudenberg, from CUNY, and Prof Jeanne Stellman, from Columbia, both public health scientists who were student activists in the sixties, and Kelsey Schertz, who is currently a MPH student.
-
AJPH Podcast (5/2018), The C-WORD: CAUSALITY AND CONSEQUENCE IN PUBLIC HEALTH(ENGLISH)
04/04/2018 Duration: 38minIn the May issue of AJPH we tackle a sensitive question: when and how widely should we use causal language to describe scientific findings of direct public health relevance? When can we say X is the cause of Y? This question is polarizing epidemiologists. Here, after having spoken with Miguel Hernan who coined the C-Word, I interview Professors Jennifer Ahern from UC Berkeley, Heidi Jones, from City University of New York, and Dana March, from Columbia University, all senior, experienced, and influential teachers, about whether we should use the C-Word more often or not.
-
AJPH Podcast, REVIEW OF THE JANUARY TO MARCH 2018 issues (CHINESE)
04/04/2018 Duration: 08minRegional Editor of AJPH, Professor Stella Yu, reviews some articles recently published in AJPH, including: Evolution of PH Education in China (1/2018); Hurricanes: Rebuilding Communities Right 1/2018); THE Linked Epidemics of Opioid Addiction and Hepatitis C (2/2018); Various Types of Arthritis in the United States (2/2018): Prevalence and Age-Related Trends From 1999 to 2014; Hearing Aid Acquisition in Chinese Older Adults With Hearing Loss (2/2018); Work as a social determinant of health (3/2018).
-
AJPH Podcast (4/2018), THE PUBLIC HEALTH DIALOGUE(ENGLISH)
07/03/2018 Duration: 43minThe two dialoguing guitars in the podcast intro announce an issue about dialoguing in public health between people having as different worldviews as republicans and democrats. I interview Georges Benjamin (APHA), David Sundwall(R-Utah), Dick Gottfried (D-NY), Pete Kirkham(R), Dick Zimmer(R-NJ). My last question to all is about a possible bipartisan public health initiative that could have some chances of success in the coming weeks. Check it out. You may be surprised to see how their opinions may sometimes converge.
-
AJPH Podcast (3/2018), WORK AS A SOCIAL DETERMINANT OF HEALTH (ENGLISH)
06/02/2018 Duration: 53minThis month we review the role of work in public health and in population health research. Work, whether we have one or not, is central to our lives but it clearly does not have the major place in public health it should have. Why is it so? To answer this difficult question my guests are Emily Ahonen (Indiana University), Michael Wright (USW), Adam Finkel (Michigan University, former OSHA), Paul Landsbergis (State University of NY), and Celeste Monforton (Texas State University).
-
AJPH Podcast (2/2018), THE LINKED EPIDEMICS OF HEPATITIS C & INJECTION OPIOIDS (ENGLISH)
09/01/2018 Duration: 38minHello and welcome to AJPH February 2018 podcast. This month we will be discussing the very worrisome epidemic of hepatitis C occurring in the United States. I first review with Professor Kimberly Page from the University of New Mexico how likely it is that, in a foreseeable future, the epidemic of hepatitis C could be controlled by a vaccine. Then the CDC epidemiologist Alice Asher explains why the epidemic is exacerbated by another epidemic of injection drug use, in particular of opioids, and why it is affecting young, non Hispanic white populations in the Appalachian region. And with Dr John Wong, clinical decision maker from Tufts University, we discuss how the availability of effective treatments may have transformed the prognosis of newly infected persons.
-
AJPH Podcast, REVIEW OF THE OCTOBER TO DECEMBER 2017 issues (CHINESE)
08/12/2017 Duration: 07minRegional Editor of AJPH, Professor Stella Yu, reviews some articles recently published in AJPH, including: Evolution of Public Health Emergency Management From Preparedness to Response and Recovery, PH and despair in the American heartland, Legacies of the Bolshevik Revolution, The Changing Pattern of Nutrition Intake by Social Class in Contemporary China, 1991–2011 (including a summary by Dr Zhun Xu, Changes in Sugar-Sweetened Soda Consumption, Weight, and Waist Circumference: 2-Year Cohort of Mexican Women, Autism Spectrum Disorder Among US Children (2002–2010): Socioeconomic, Racial, and Ethnic Disparities, and Shade Sails and Passive Recreation in Public Parks of Melbourne and Denver: A Randomized Intervention.
-
AJPH podcast (1/2018) LA SALUD PUBLICA EN PUERTO RICO 2.5 MESES DESPUES DE IRMA Y MARIA (SPANISH)
08/12/2017 Duration: 15minEste mes hablamos con el Profesor Carlos Rodríguez-Díaz de la Escuela Graduada de Salud Pública de la Universidad de Puerto Rico en San Juan. Hablamos de la situación de la salud publica en Puerto Rico dos meses y medio después que los huracanes Irma y María devastaron las islas del archipiélago.
-
AJPH Podcast (1/2018), HURRICANES: REBUILDING COMMUNITIES RIGHT (ENGLISH)
08/12/2017 Duration: 57minThe hurricanes and wildfires are announcing a new normal in public health: a time in which natural disasters occur and recur regularly, most likely at an accelerating pace. With my guests I review what it is to be victim of a hurricane, what can be done to prevent some of the humanitarian and environmental consequences, and what can be done after the disaster to rebuild often poorly built communities the right way. Th last interview is about whether and how this new public health normal is linked to climate change. My interviewees are: Tara Zolnikov, Carlos Rodrigues-Díaz, Maureen Lichtveld, Reed Tuckson, and Alistair Woodward.
-
AJPH Podcast (12/2017), PUBLIC PARKS AND PUBLIC HEALTH (ENGLISH)
08/11/2017 Duration: 35minWhat is the role of public parks in the prevention of skin cancer and many chronic health conditions? How can we build parks that promote skin protection and physical activity? I discuss these questions with Dr Robert Zarr, from ParkRXAmerica, Dr Dave Buller, who publishes a randomized intervention study in AJPH, aimed at establishing whether building sails providing shade in parks increases the use of parks, and with Professor Carolyn Heckman, expert in skin cancer prevention.
-
AJPH podcast (10/2017)REFRESCOS AZUCARADOS Y OBESIDAD EN MEXICO (SPANISH)
11/10/2017 Duration: 17minEste mes hablamos con el Doctor Martin Lajous del Instituto Nacional de Salud Publica de México, en Cuernavaca. Dr Lajous es el Co-Investigador Principal del Estudio de la Salud de las Maestras en México Y publica con sus co-autores un análisis de la asociación entre consumo de refrescos azucarados y peso en mujeres mexicanas. Hablamos de cómo estos resultados pueden influenciar la decisión del gobierno mexicano de crear un impuesto sobre la bebidas azucaradas para reducir el consumo y luchar contra la obesidad.
-
AJPH Podcast (11/2017), PUBLIC HEALTH LEGACIES OF THE BOLSHEVIK REVOLUTION (ENGLISH)
11/10/2017 Duration: 39minWith my guests, who conduct research in Russia, we review the evolution of access to abortion and contraception, the magnitude and treatment of drug addition, and the policy towards tobacco smoking in the USSR, created 100 years ago, and in Russia today. Interviewees are Michele Rivkin-Fish is a cultural anthropologist, Trish Starks, a historian, and historian Nikolai Krementsov who, with AJPH history Editor, Ted Brown, curated this special section.
-
AJPH Podcast, REVIEW OF THE JULY TO OCTOBER 2017 issues (CHINESE)
13/09/2017 Duration: 10minRegional Editor of AJPH, Professor Stella Yu, reviews some articles recently published in AJPH, including: APIA Health Forum comments on national data collection on Asians. Paul-Ram comments on oversampling of Asians in NHANES. Doering – air mattress and infant suffocation. Chinese researchers paper to compare consumption of carbonated soft drinks among young adolescents in 53 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). CARDOSO –Violence Against Women and Household Ownership of Radios, Computers, and Phones in 20 Countries. June supplement is devoted to oral health inequities. Completely open access. Abrogation of Sexual Orientation Question to Older Americans: Misstep or Homophobia? And more.
-
AJPH podcast (10/2017)DESESPERACION EN EL CORAZON AMERICANO
13/09/2017 Duration: 12minLa esperanza de vida de los blancos americanos que viven en el campo al contrario de otras comunidades en los Estados Unidos o muchas otras partes del mundo disminuyó durante los diez últimos años. Desesperación de la clase obrera blanca? Hablamos de esto con María Mora, de la Universidad de Wisconsin, y con Ana Diez-Roux, de la escuela de salud publica de Filadelfia.
-
AJPH Podcast (10/2017), DESPAIR IN THE AMERICAN HEARTLAND (ENGLISH)
13/09/2017 Duration: 31minThis month we tackle the decline in life expectancy of Whites living in rural regions of the US because of suicide, addiction to opioids, and alcohol. Is it despair generated by the stifled future of American white working class? My interviewees are Professors Beth Stein, Ana Diez-Roux and Associate Editor Paul Erwin.
-
AJPH Podcast (9/2017) WATER ACCESS AND HEALTH DISPARITIES IN THE US (ENGLISH)
08/08/2017 Duration: 25minWelcome to the podcast of AJPH. In this issue of AJPH I have three guests (Carolyn Brooks, Anisha Patel, and Kelley Dearing-Smith) to discuss a massive public health problem which is rarely mentioned and probably underestimated: unequal access to water in the United States.
-
AJPH Podcast (8/2017)ABROGATION OF SEXUAL ORIENTATION QUESTION FROM A NATIONAL SURVEY (ENGLISH)
11/07/2017 Duration: 38minWelcome to the podcast of AJPH. In this issue of AJPH we discuss the decision last spring by the new administration to erase a question about sexual orientation in a survey submitted to beneficiaries of the Older American Act. I interview Kathy Greenlee, Randy Sell, Gary Gates, Joanna Semlyen, and Laura Durso.
-
AJPH Podcast of the July 2017 issue (CHINESE)
07/06/2017 Duration: 05minRegional Editor of AJPH, Professor Stella Yu, reviews some articles recently published in AJPH.
-
AJPH Podcast of the July 2017 issue (ENGLISH)
07/06/2017 Duration: 18minWelcomed to the podcast of AJPH. In this issue I discuss of chemical risk assessment with Associate Editor Michael Greenberg from Rutgers University and Dr Maureen Gwinn from the Office of Research and Development of the Environmental Protection Agency.
-
AJPH podcast sobre contenido del numero de julio 2017
07/06/2017 Duration: 11minBienvenidos al podcast mensual de la Revista Americana de Salud Pública para el mes de junio. Soy Alfredo Morabia, el Editor en Jefe de la AJPH. Este mes hablo con Diego Vasquez, un investigador de la Universidad Católica de Santiago de Guayaquil, en el Ecuador, sobre terremoto y Zika. Con sus colegas comparó el riesgo de contraer el virus Zika en las zonas afectadas por el terremoto de 2016 y en las zonas control.